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IJRR
2006

Scaling Hard Vertical Surfaces with Compliant Microspine Arrays

14 years 13 days ago
Scaling Hard Vertical Surfaces with Compliant Microspine Arrays
A new approach for climbing hard vertical surfaces has been developed that allows a robot to scale concrete, stucco, brick and masonry walls without using suction or adhesives. The approach is inspired by the mechanisms observed in some climbing insects and spiders and involves arrays of microspines that catch on surface asperities. The arrays are located on the toes of the robot and consist of a tuned, multi-link compliant suspension. In this paper we discuss the fundamental issues of spine allometric scaling versus surface roughness and the suspension needed to maximize the probability that each spine will find a useable surface irregularity and to distribute climbing tensile and shear loads among many spines. The principles are demonstrated with a new climbing robot that can scale a wide range of exterior walls.
Alan T. Asbeck, Sangbae Kim, Mark R. Cutkosky, Wil
Added 13 Dec 2010
Updated 13 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where IJRR
Authors Alan T. Asbeck, Sangbae Kim, Mark R. Cutkosky, William R. Provancher, Michele Lanzetta
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